ID2126 English for Architecture & Urban Planning III
Course Description
English for Architecture and Urban Planning III at Universidad Simon Bolivar is a blended course intended for the practice of the different language abilities introduced in the previous courses plus the discussion of new aspects of Architecture and Urban Planning. The course has been designed to continue practicing reading and writing making a stronger emphasis on the speaking and listening skills.
Some tasks are oriented towards listening to authentic materials and others towards F2F presentations of various topics after doing some research. The course follows a task-content and project-based approach to language teaching, based on the tenets of the social constructivist theory of language learning.
General objective:
Analyze the content and discourse of different architectural and urban planning elements and effects such as Circulation (Vertical & Horizontal), Rhythm, Color, Light, Texture and Acoustics to finally design their own final projects.
Final Projects will consists of the integration of voice, text, and images to present all topics discussed during the term analyzing the work of a famous architect.
Specific objectives
1. Language
At the end of the course students will have practiced
vocabulary related to the content
reading authentic texts related to the content
writing different kinds of texts
listening to and viewing authentic videos
Not all together, students will create a project integrating course content.
2. Content
At the end of the course students will have discussed about these architectural elements and effects:
Circulation: Horizontal and Vertical circulation, Sequences in planning
Rhythm
Color
Light
Texture
Acoustics
There will be a practical part where students will apply the concepts discussed for identifying architectural elements and effects analyzing plans and descriptions of different works of the same architect/urban planner. Students will also be required to identify such elements in their own designs.
3. Skills
During the course, students will have the opportunity to
use different web tools for learning: web pages, online platforms, blogs, wikis, text and voice chats
work in groups
develop collaborative skills
develop autonomy in learning through the use of meta-cognitive skills
For the timetable with the distribution of the content by week, please click on the one that best suits your section (Mon-Wed/Tue/Thu)
Methodology
This blended course has been designed to give certain autonomy and flexibility to the students. Moodle will be used as the asynchronous center for communication, and it will be complemented with this course wiki in www.wikispaces.com, and a collaborative blog students will create.
The multimedia lab will be our meeting place, especially for students who do not have easy access to computers. However, students are not forced to be in the lab, they can do the activities from elsewhere, and not necessarily at the same time the lab session is taking place. They only need to complete the activities assigned for each week (see TimetableMon-Wed / Tue-Thu).
Using tailored made exercises and others found on the web, students, individually, and at their own pace, will practice the aspects of the language they need to work on. Students will also participate in group work, and these activities can be done at any time the groups decide to meet; in the case of chats, participants must be attentive to previous invitation and agreement with the teacher & classmates.
Some activities will combine f2f and online elements, these activities will require students’ presence in the classroom. With the different activities students will develop and practice vocabulary related to the content while they read authentic texts and listen and view authentic videos.
Evaluation
The evaluation follows the principles of Alternative Evaluation. There will be teacher correction of class assignments but students will also be involved in peer and self-assessment of the work done. Rubrics and checklists will be generated to assess the different tasks.
See Evaluation Plan section for details
Resources
For the online resources used in the course, see the Useful Links section.
DEPARTAMENTO DE IDIOMAS - USB
ID2126 English for Architecture & Urban Planning III
Course Description
English for Architecture and Urban Planning III at Universidad Simon Bolivar is a blended course intended for the practice of the different language abilities introduced in the previous courses plus the discussion of new aspects of Architecture and Urban Planning. The course has been designed to continue practicing reading and writing making a stronger emphasis on the speaking and listening skills.
Some tasks are oriented towards listening to authentic materials and others towards F2F presentations of various topics after doing some research. The course follows a task-content and project-based approach to language teaching, based on the tenets of the social constructivist theory of language learning.
General objective:
Analyze the content and discourse of different architectural and urban planning elements and effects such as Circulation (Vertical & Horizontal), Rhythm, Color, Light, Texture and Acoustics to finally design their own final projects.
Final Projects will consists of the integration of voice, text, and images to present all topics discussed during the term analyzing the work of a famous architect.
Specific objectives
1. Language
At the end of the course students will have practiced
- vocabulary related to the content
- reading authentic texts related to the content
- writing different kinds of texts
- listening to and viewing authentic videos
Not all together, students will create a project integrating course content.2. Content
At the end of the course students will have discussed about these architectural elements and effects:
- Circulation: Horizontal and Vertical circulation, Sequences in planning
- Rhythm
- Color
- Light
- Texture
- Acoustics
There will be a practical part where students will apply the concepts discussed for identifying architectural elements and effects analyzing plans and descriptions of different works of the same architect/urban planner. Students will also be required to identify such elements in their own designs.3. Skills
During the course, students will have the opportunity to
- use different web tools for learning: web pages, online platforms, blogs, wikis, text and voice chats
- work in groups
- develop collaborative skills
- develop autonomy in learning through the use of meta-cognitive skills
For the timetable with the distribution of the content by week, please click on the one that best suits your section (Mon-Wed/Tue/Thu)Methodology
This blended course has been designed to give certain autonomy and flexibility to the students. Moodle will be used as the asynchronous center for communication, and it will be complemented with this course wiki in www.wikispaces.com, and a collaborative blog students will create.
The multimedia lab will be our meeting place, especially for students who do not have easy access to computers. However, students are not forced to be in the lab, they can do the activities from elsewhere, and not necessarily at the same time the lab session is taking place. They only need to complete the activities assigned for each week (see Timetable Mon-Wed / Tue-Thu).
Using tailored made exercises and others found on the web, students, individually, and at their own pace, will practice the aspects of the language they need to work on. Students will also participate in group work, and these activities can be done at any time the groups decide to meet; in the case of chats, participants must be attentive to previous invitation and agreement with the teacher & classmates.
Some activities will combine f2f and online elements, these activities will require students’ presence in the classroom. With the different activities students will develop and practice vocabulary related to the content while they read authentic texts and listen and view authentic videos.
Evaluation
The evaluation follows the principles of Alternative Evaluation. There will be teacher correction of class assignments but students will also be involved in peer and self-assessment of the work done. Rubrics and checklists will be generated to assess the different tasks.
See Evaluation Plan section for details
Resources
For the online resources used in the course, see the Useful Links section.